Prudential Insurance Co. v. Foster

1946 OK 130, 168 P.2d 295, 197 Okla. 39, 166 A.L.R. 1, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 16, 1946
DocketNo. 30914.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1946 OK 130 (Prudential Insurance Co. v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudential Insurance Co. v. Foster, 1946 OK 130, 168 P.2d 295, 197 Okla. 39, 166 A.L.R. 1, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 464 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This is an action to recover double indemnity on account of alleged accidental death. Ivan Prentice Foster, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, is assertedly entitled to the benefits payable under two policies of life insurance containing double indemnity prcwisions, issued by plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant or company, on the life of his father, Howard Arthur Foster.

The body of the insured was recovered from Lake Okmulgee, a few miles *40 from the city of Okmulgee, Okla., on September 21, 1939. The defendant company paid the face amount of the policy to plaintiff without litigation but refused to make the extra payment named in the double indemnity provisions.

Plaintiff pleads his allegations on the two policies in two separate causes of action set forth in his petition. After the court bad ruled unfavorably on its motion to make plaintiff’s petition more definite and certain as well as its demurrer to said petition, the defendant filed an answer renewing its challenge to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s petition, denying, among other things, plaintiff’s right to sue on his second alleged cause of action and asserting that the cause of insured’s death was his own intentional act or suicide. Upon the issues framed by these pleadings and a reply filed by plaintiff, the cause was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff.

From said judgment the company has appealed and argues its assignment of alleged error under four propositions. The first of these deals with the question of whether or not plaintiff was the proper party to institute the second cause of action alleged in his petition. It was based upon a commonly termed “industrial life insurance policy” and provided that immediately upon receipt of due proof of death the company would pay the amount of insurance therein specified “to the executors or administrators of the insured, unless payment be made under the provisions of the next succeeding paragraph; . . .” The next succeeding paragraph is headed “facility of payment” and reads as follows:

“It is understood and agreed that the said company may make any payment or grant any non-forfeiture provision provided for in this policy to any relative by blood or connection by marriage of the insured, or to any person appearing to said company to be equitably entitled to the same by reason of having incurred expense on behalf of the insured', for his or her burial, or for any other purpose, and the production by the company of a receipt signed by any or either of said persons or of other sufficient proof of such payment or grant of such provision to any or either of them shall be conclusive evidence that such payment or provision has been made or granted to the person or persons entitled thereto, and that all claims under this policy have been fully satisfied.”

In support of its argument on this feature of the case, the company cites authorities for the general rule that facility of payment clauses in industrial life insurance policies, providing that the insurer may pay the benefits under the policy to the beneficiary named or to a relative of the insured, are for the benefit of the insurer, to be exercised or not, at its option, and that they give a party to whom the insurer might have elected to pay the benefits no right to compel the insurer to make such payments to him. Plaintiff finds no fault with these cases, but asserts .that the rule for which they stand has no application to the present one, for here the company had exercised its option and that he was not merely a party that it “might have elected to pay” but was the party it had elected to pay. It is said that the defendant’s payment of the face amount of the policy to plaintiff estops it to deny that he is not the proper party to claim the additional double indemnity award. An examination of the authorities and the evidence in this case convinces us of the soundness of plaintiff’s position. It is undisputed here that no executor or administrator was ever appointed for the insured’s estate; that the company required only one proof of death to be made on the two policies sued upon, and'that although the forms for making such proof brought to plaintiff by a representative of the company bore written instructions specifying that the statement provided for thereon should be completed by the “beneficiary” under the policy and if payable to 'insured’s estate, the certificate must be executed by the administrator or executor, yet the assistant superintendent of the company witnessed the forms *41 with only plaintiffs signature thereon and recommended that his claim thus made, as an individual (rather than as a representative of his father’s estate), be paid; that the face amount of both policies was paid to plaintiff on company checks written to him as an individual; that in correspondence from the company it was represented to plaintiff that his claim for double indemnity on the policies was denied solely because it was thought that insured’s death was not accidental; that never until the institution of plaintiff’s action did the company suggest to plaintiff that he was not the proper party to claim any of the benefits under the policy nor request that other claims or proofs be submitted. We believe that under the evidence in this case the defendant company, upon considerations of waiver and estoppel, is in no position to maintain at this late date that plaintiff is not the proper party to receive all the benefits payable under the policy. See Fipps v. Stidham, 174 Okla. 473, 50 P. 2d 680; American Central Life Ins. Co. of St. Louis, Mo., v. Sinclair, 61 Okla. 17, 160 P. 60; Farris v. Comm. Union Fire Ins. Co. of N. Y., 176 Okla. 331, 55 P. 2d 432; Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Howell, 144 Okla. 166, 289 P. 734; Craddock v. Fidelity Life Ass’n, 226 Iowa, 744, 285 N.W. 169, 125 A.L.R. 1261; Clarkston v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 190 Mo. App. 624, 176 S.W. 437.

Defense counsel call our attention to certain evidence indicating that plaintiff has paid only a part of the debts the insured owed at the time of his death and says that the company might have learned of some other person entitled to payment under the policy by reason of having paid such debts. They say this is suggested as a “possibility” in support of the contention that mere payment of the face amount of the policy did not necessarily mean that the company recognized plaintiff as a proper beneficiary for the other benefits. Such a “possibility” has no bearing on the question at issue. No matter to what extent the company may have been influenced to withhold payment to plaintiff of the sum in question by any possible discoveries it may have made with regard to the insured’s debts and their payment, the fact remains that nothing of this sort was ever suggested or brought to plaintiff’s attention before the triai of this case and constitutes no obstacle to application of the principles of waiver and estoppel herein. Nor could the fact that the insured left outstanding debts or that some were paid by persons other than the plaintiff furnish defendant any valid excuse for not following its payment of the face amount of the policy to plaintiff with payment to him of the double indemnity also. The company is not liable for the insured’s debts nor was it bound to pay any part of the benefits under the policy to any person who had paid all or a part of them.

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 130, 168 P.2d 295, 197 Okla. 39, 166 A.L.R. 1, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudential-insurance-co-v-foster-okla-1946.